General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: I don't know how many of you all remember late 1999. [View all]da svenster
(70 posts)i don't know the internals of system 7 or 8 of MacOS on how dates were handled so i can't speak to the risk. if they were using a UNIX like representation and since they were 32 bit operating systems, i think dates will run out on those boxes in 2038. so i guess if the world ran on macOS we'd have been fine.
what was more at risk was things like... financials, distribution, energy, manufacturing.
you could be plenty smug that your mac was running...
... until a few minutes after midnight on 2000-01-01 the power went out because some RPG or COBOL code on a system that controls the power grid in your area didn't know how to handle being flung back to 1900. or the chip in your elevator decided 1900 wasn't in the schedule so it hain't gonna work and i guess you're going to have to take the stairs.
how did that happen? a lot of people planned, analyzed, coded where they could, replaced where they couldn't, and worked their asses off to make it not happen.
but it wasn't perfect. the wikipedia article has a snapshot of some of the issues that cropped up.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_2000_problem